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HPV-driven Heterogeneity in Cervical Cancer: Study on the Role of Epithelial Cells and Myofibroblasts in the Tumor Progression Based on Single-cell RNA Sequencing Analysis

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Journal PeerJ
Date 2024 Sep 30
PMID 39346086
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Abstract

Background: Cervical cancer (CC) is a neoplasia with a high heterogeneity. We aimed to explore the characteristics of tumor microenvironment (TME) for CC treatment.

Methods: HPV positive (+) and negative (-) samples from cervical cancer (CC) patients were sourced from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database. The single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) data were processed and annotated for cell types utilizing the Seurat package. Following this, the expression levels and biological roles of the marker genes were analyzed applying real-time PCR (RT-PCR) and transwell assays. Furthermore, the enrichment of genes with significantly differential expressions and copy number variations was assessed by the ClusterProlifer and inferCNV software packages.

Results: Seven main cell clusters were classified based on a total of 12,431 cells. The HPV- CC samples exhibited a higher immune cell infiltration level, while epithelial cells and myofibroblasts had higher proportion in the HPV+ CC samples with extensive heterogeneity. Immune pathways including antigen treatment and presentation, immunoglobulin production and T cell mediated immunity were significantly activated in the HPV- CC group with lower cell cycle and proliferation activity. However, the anti-tumor immunity of these cells was inhibited in HPV+ CC group with higher cell proliferation activity. Moreover, the amplification and loss of CNVs also supported that these cells in HPV- CC samples were prone to anti-tumor activation. Further cell validation results showed that except GZMA, the levels of APOC1, CEACAM6, FOXP3, SFRP4 and TFF3 were all higher in CC cells Hela, and that silencing TFF3 could inhibit the migration and invasion of CC cells .

Conclusion: This study highlighted the critical role of HPV infection in CC progression, providing a novel molecular basis for optimizing the current preventive screening and personalized treatment for the cancer.

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